I am looking at various aspects of concentration profiles in pipe flow at various radii. When I wrote the program I set the radius intervals at which I view the characteristics as a variable. Now I need to put a legend on the plot (to make any sense of the results) but can't seem to do it with a variable number of intervals (lines that need legend entries). I tried:

R = (0.0000001:R/RS:R)';

hold all

for k = 2:RS+1
plot(F(:,1),F(:,k));
z = legend('R(k)',k);
end

This is for k intervals where R is holding the values I need on the legend. It either gives me one 'R(k)' as a string entry (above) or an error when I remove the single quotes. how do I get around this? Thanks,

"Joseph " <jcremaldi@gmail.com> wrote in message <iaeo9v$of2$1@fred.mathworks.com>...
> I am looking at various aspects of concentration profiles in pipe flow at various radii. When I wrote the program I set the radius intervals at which I view the characteristics as a variable. Now I need to put a legend on the plot (to make any sense of the results) but can't seem to do it with a variable number of intervals (lines that need legend entries). I tried:
>
> R = (0.0000001:R/RS:R)';
>
> hold all
>
> for k = 2:RS+1
> plot(F(:,1),F(:,k));
> z = legend('R(k)',k);
> end
>
> This is for k intervals where R is holding the values I need on the legend. It either gives me one 'R(k)' as a string entry (above) or an error when I remove the single quotes. how do I get around this? Thanks,
>
> Joe

"Joseph " <jcremaldi@gmail.com> wrote in message <iaeo9v$of2$1@fred.mathworks.com>...
> I am looking at various aspects of concentration profiles in pipe flow at various radii. When I wrote the program I set the radius intervals at which I view the characteristics as a variable. Now I need to put a legend on the plot (to make any sense of the results) but can't seem to do it with a variable number of intervals (lines that need legend entries). I tried:
>
> R = (0.0000001:R/RS:R)';
>
> hold all
>
> for k = 2:RS+1
> plot(F(:,1),F(:,k));
> z = legend('R(k)',k);
> end
>
> This is for k intervals where R is holding the values I need on the legend. It either gives me one 'R(k)' as a string entry (above) or an error when I remove the single quotes. how do I get around this? Thanks,
>
> Joe

"Joseph " <jcremaldi@gmail.com> wrote in message
news:iaeo9v$of2$1@fred.mathworks.com...
> I am looking at various aspects of concentration profiles in pipe flow at
> various radii. When I wrote the program I set the radius intervals at
> which I view the characteristics as a variable. Now I need to put a
> legend on the plot (to make any sense of the results) but can't seem to
> do it with a variable number of intervals (lines that need legend
> entries). I tried:
>
> R = (0.0000001:R/RS:R)';
>
> hold all
>
> for k = 2:RS+1
> plot(F(:,1),F(:,k));
> z = legend('R(k)',k);
> end
>
> This is for k intervals where R is holding the values I need on the
> legend. It either gives me one 'R(k)' as a string entry (above) or an
> error when I remove the single quotes. how do I get around this? Thanks,

I would set the DisplayName property for each of your lines (and store each
line's handle in an element of a vector) then pass the vector of handles
into LEGEND on its own.

Thanks for the info, I would like to do something really similar to this post but instead of having a single plot I have 2 subplots.
I have tried to adapt this code for it to generate a legend in one of them or the other or both (I don't really care) that can change with a parameter but everything failed. Any ideas?
thanks a lot!
Laura

On 11/1/2012 8:39 PM, Laura wrote:
> Thanks for the info, I would like to do something really similar to this
> post but instead of having a single plot I have 2 subplots.
> I have tried to adapt this code for it to generate a legend in one of
> them or the other or both (I don't really care) that can change with a
> parameter but everything failed. Any ideas?
...

Well, I'm sure not "everything" failed but what, specifically, is a
little hard to tell w/o any code to see what you actually tried amongst
the everythings...

You'll have to select the desired subplot, of course, but other than
that the process would be essentially identical to the posted code--

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